Read A Petrol Scented Spring Online
Authors: Ajay Close
âI've been thinking I might go back to calling myself Argemone.'
Hilda doesn't know why this should be so killing, but even Dodo is amused. They talk about Gordon and Gyp and their kids, and Billy's nephews, and Dodo says âIt's funny none of us had children of our own'. Not so very funny, Hilda drawls, with two of us lesbian and the other one not sure. Anyway, there's a lot of barren stock about. This woman in Sydney, too. After a moment's hesitation, Billy says, âYou mean the one who knew Hugh Ferguson Whatsit?' Yes, Hilda says, that one.
Dodo puts down her brandy glass. Hilda wonders if she twigged earlier, in the kitchen. She certainly knows now. There's a green flicker in her eyes that takes Hilda back to when Billy switched allegiance. She is feeling usurped:
she
should have been the one to bump into Arabella Colville-Reeves. She can still write to her, of course, but Hilda would bet her boots she won't get a reply.
âIs she very like me?' Dodo asks.
âMaybe once. Not now.'
âSo she's . . .?'
âStrong.'
âI'm strong.'
âIntelligent.'
âAnd I'm not?'
âYou married him.'
âDid he ask her?'
Billy says âCome on, Do: ancient history.'
But she won't be put off. âDid he?'
âHe tried to get her to go to Canada.'
âWhere he sent me,' Dodo says in a small voice.
âBut with her, the idea was he'd come too.'
âHildegarde
,'
Billy says warningly.
âAll he had to do was ask me to stay. It was ridiculous, taking off because of someone he knew before he met me. If he'd said one word to stop meâ'
Billy looks at Hilda.
ââDid she see him again, after they let her out of prison?'
Hilda didn't ask. She could bluff it, of course, but what would be the right answer from Dodo's point of view? Perhaps she would rather her sanctimonious first husband had been a secret rake.
âSomeone sent her a picture of him cut out of the newspaper.'
Dodo jumps on this, âAnd?'
âHe'd got fat.'
â
But did she love him
?'
âSteady on, Do.' Billy gives Hilda another meaningful look.
âIf she did,' Hilda says, âshe didn't tell me.'
They stare into the fire. Hilda feels like an actress who has fluffed her big scene. A chance in a million, and what did she learn from it? Just one thing: even as an old lady, Arabella has more sex appeal than Dodo.
âHe wrote to congratulate her when they gave women the vote. She was long gone. Her sister came across the letter in a drawer, took it over when she visited Oz. This was about ten years ago, too late to write backâ'
Dodo looks up.
ââhe was dead by then.'
Dodo's mouth frames a word, but no sound comes out.
Hilda drains her glass. âJust after the war, she said.'
Four months since I'd left the Gold Coast and still I woke every morning feeling cold, missing my old breakfast of paw paw with lime juice, fruit bats hanging in the trees above me, women cooking fufu on the street below. Charcoal smoke and orange blossom and the oddly comforting stench of drains.
Glasgow smelled of damp. It rained all day every day, as it must have when I studied medicine there, though my memories were all sunlit and laughter-filled. We laughed in 1943, too, but my shoes still let in water. Why had we come back?
To make an honest woman of you, old
girl.
I could see Sheila and her friends thinking
â
you can't marry him' the first time they met Beefy, but they warmed to his jokes and nicknames and booming voice. Warmed to his warmth.
You would have thought Scottish hospitals would be clamouring to employ someone with my experience. Evidently curing the natives didn't count. With nothing else to do, Beefy and I spent every minute in each other's company. We had a ball, despite the powdered egg, and the mouse droppings, and the stony looks each time I walked into a bar (too old to be a tart, so what was I doing there?). Despite the dean at the Episcopal cathedral who found out I wasn't yet divorced and wouldn't marry us, no matter who my uncle had been.
Anyway.
We were lucky to find those digs. The tenement was on a corner, with a broad potato bed between us and the other side of the road, so we didn't look directly into the building opposite. The ceilings were high, our fellow boarders friendly, our landlady took the brass ring on my finger at face value. As far as she was concerned I was already Mrs Coubrough. And Sheila was just up the road in Marchmont Terrace with her ruthless mouser and her black-market coal and a cook who worked wonders with the ration.
As soon as we were married, Beefy and I planned to get out of Glasgow. I was applying for jobs in England, as far south as we could get, as close to Europe and temperate winters and summer heat. We had love, and his pension to tide us over, we'd be all right. But first, I had to get a divorce.
Â
I never thought he'd want to see me.
Beefy was determined to come too. If I wouldn't let him meet the blighter, then he'd wait in a bar and escort me back to Glasgow. It took the best part of a day to dissuade him. And now I was shivering at Waverley Station in my pre-war musquash, with every other woman on the platform bare-legged or in uniform, and every other poster asking
Is Your Journey
Really Necessary?
Tommies loitered by the newsagent's counter, each one burdened with an enormous kit bag and strap-on hessian packs fore and aft. I felt tired just looking at them, but they were lively enough to whistle at those WAAFs running to catch the Kirkcaldy train. Sex was everywhere in those days. Couples kissing in broad daylight. Gasps and moans in the blackout: so many girls with their pants round their ankles and their backs to the wall. I always hoped the man was a Yank. They said the Army gave them rubber johnnies.
Turning my head, I scanned the crowd. A surge of adrenaline sharpened my eyesight. Over there. Brown homburg, tweed overcoat, that hawk's gaze. I hadn't expected to feel like this. So desperate to get away.
He stopped a few feet off. A porter walked between us. The hiss of an engine about to depart. A platform announcement, the Inverness train was late.
It had been sixteen years.
âHugh,' I said.
He stepped forward.
A moment of confusion, as we wondered whether to shake hands.
He cleared his throat, âYou look well.'
âSo well you didn't recognise me,' I said drily, wondering whose voice this was. Not mine.
He gestured towards Waverley steps. We carved two separate paths through the people descending from Princes Street.
The North British Hotel was next door to the station. Gilt-framed crags and stags, Edwardian mahogany, black Vitrolite from the twenties. Notices in copperplate script regretfully informing patrons of this or that decline from their exalted pre-war standards.
âWe can get a cup of tea here,' he said.
God, I needed a drink. How had I spent so many years of my life with a teetotaller?
Without his hat and coat he looked younger than sixty-nine. The heaviness I'd found so ageing when we were married had stopped the clock. His head was solid as wet clay. A faint craquelure around the eyes, but his brow and cheeks and jaw still plumply taut. Meeting him for the first time, you might have taken him for a sensualist. Until he looked at you. Who was feeding him these days? Had he found a companion to share his retirement, a wife-in-waiting to trim the hairs in his nose and listen to the radio with him at night? And later, did she warm his bed? Good luck to her. Beefy was fifty-two. The future Mrs Coubrough had the better bargain.
âI'd like a sherry,' I told the waitress.
His mouth formed a disapproving line, though choosing sherry was a concession to his feelings.
âActually, no,' I said, âa gin, please.'
Which, when it came, was even weaker than the ones they served in Glasgow. Still, at least they'd found some proper tonic water. The taste of quinine reminded me of all the malaria cases I'd treated in Africa. He listened with that look I used to dread.
âI thought you might manage a professional interest,' I said, surprising him. And myself. I'd rarely taken this satiric tone when we lived together.
After a few empty seconds I refused to fill, he told me he'd retired in thirty-four. When war broke out the Emergency Medical Service had got in touch. They were recruiting a team of volunteers to deal with outbreaks of neurosis in the civilian population: panic during air raids, rumour-spreading, hoarding food, anything that could undermine the war effort.
âAnd has there been much of this neurosis?'
We both knew the answer to this.
âNot as much as was feared,' he said.
Outside, dusk was falling. Two waitresses circled the room, lowering the blackout blinds, until we were sitting in complete darkness. A brittle
click
and we were revealed again. That same yellow light you found in hotels the world over.
Weak as it was, the gin did its work. I shrugged off my fur, warmed all the way through. Across the lounge, a grey-haired man caught my eye. Just for a moment. I might have been fifty-three but I'd kept my waist, and my skin had retained enough sun to mark me out from the peeliewallie locals. There was a young woman with him, swollen belly straining against the crepe of her dress, one of the unlucky few whose suffering didn't pass with the first trimester.
Hugh watched me watching them, his hawk's eyes burning into my cheek.
âWho is he, this man you want to marry?'
He had never been one for small talk.
âA Scotsman,' I said, âa structural engineer. Nearer to me in age. And in other things.'
âHe knows you already have a husband?'
âWe've no secrets from each other.'
âThen he's a scoundrel.'
I raised my eyebrows, took another sip of gin, âA scoundrel who loves meâ'
He released one of his old disparaging breaths.
ââas you never did.'
Colour flooded his face. He checked the nuns at the next table, who hadn't heard. And what if they had?
Studying that beetroot flush, I wondered about his blood pressure, his risk of apoplexy or heart seizure. Many a heavy old man went that way. A moment later I was stricken by the thought, by the words
old man
.
In the street outside, the air raid siren wailed.
I'd come back in June. Queues outside the butcher's, sandbags everywhere, but no trace of the enemy. Doubtless there'd been panic, back in forty-one, but by now nobody rushed. The waitress continued loading dirty crockery onto her tray and carried it calmly out to the kitchen.
The hotel manager walked in, urging us to our feet. We would be supplied with fresh pots of tea after the all-clear. Hugh collected his coat and hat. I took my time, finished my gin.
In the lobby there was a scrum. Chambermaids, porters, kitchen skivvies, travellers too smart for the station buffet, guests flushed from the bedrooms, grandmothers and great aunts giving white-kneed schoolboys a mid-term treat: all of us trying to get down the stairs to the cellars. The manager asked for patience, the taking of turns from left and right. No one listened. Hugh and I loitered at the back.
âI'll not divorce you,' he said in my ear, making me start. The old dogmatic Hugh, though I recalled these diktats being delivered at arm's length. Now the words were flavoured with his tobacco breath. His baritone voice vibrated in my skin.
Someone stepped on a nun's foot. Tempers were rising. Grumbling turned to accusation. Clumsiness, bad manners, pushing-in. Hugh tipped his head towards the room we had just left.
Back to our table in the empty lounge, amid the half-drunk teacups and crumb-strewn plates.
I'll
not divorce you
. It wasn't as if the stigma could hurt his career. Besides, I was the adulterous party, the shame was all mine. Why would he refuse?
He lifted a corner of the blackout blind, peering up into the sky. I pictured a fleet of Messerschmitts following the line of Princes Street towards the clock tower directly above us.
âIf we couldn't live together, we can still die together,' I said.
And then it came to me: the provenance of this ironic drawl of mine.
He dropped the blind. âNo one's going to die.'
âIt was a joke.' In my new Arabella voice, I added, âThere weren't too many of those when we were married.'
âWe are
still married
.'
Something in his tone. Looking up to meet his eye, I felt a flutter in my chest. What a fool I was, my vanity would feed on anything. Beefy wasn't the first. Hospital colleagues, embassy staff, a fellow who'd deflected my questions with vague talk of âimport-export'. We'd drive out to the Pyramids, the temple at Dakor, the Wli falls. A late dinner, a moonlit walk. The heady moment when our laughter stopped. That sweet languor, my blood slowing with the miraculous certainty: I was wanted.
I thought about saying it:
I was more married to
that diamond smuggler than I was to you
.
A slam as the door to the basement was pulled shut.
âWhere are you living?' My words were loud in the silence.
âMontgomery Street.'
âYour own household?'
âLodgings. Though we've been together so many years we feel like family.'
âA pretty widow, with children?'
He gave me a long, unsparing look, âI've kept my vows, if that's what you're asking.'
âBecause being married to me brought you such pleasure?'
â
Because you're my
wife
.'
We both heard the footsteps. Our heads turned. An angular woman in a tin helmet glared at us from the doorway.
âAre youse deaf? Get in that shelter
now
.'
Â
The whitewashed cellar walls were lined with two tiers of bunks. On the lower tier sat the nuns; mothers with children; a few frail, white-moustached old men and their indestructible wives. Everyone else was on the floor. Electric light bulbs dangled at intervals from a cable running the length of the ceiling. Though he was quick to look away, the filaments were seared across his vision, still there when he shut his eyes. A crypt-like smell of underground mixed with the warmer stink of sour breath, unwashed armpits, flatus.
We claimed the last vacant bunk, beyond the glare of the naked bulbs. From the look I gave the grimy blanket, he gathered I had not had much to do with shelters. I asked how long we would be down there, as if he could read the Luftwaffe's minds. He saw I was worried about missing my train. No point getting myself into a state, since there was nothing I could do about it. I bridled, as I always did when he talked sense. Then, shrugging, I relaxed.
Side by side, we watched the people on the floor. The upper bunk made a cave around us. He glanced down at my shoes, my still neatly-turned ankles. Something French-smelling in his nostrils, soap or scent. In a bunk on the opposite wall, the pregnant woman turned away to let her companion rub her back. Hugh had taken him for her father but, now he thought about it, the gap in their ages was no wider than the years between us.
âWhen you went away to study, I'd listen for the postman. Friday evenings I'd meet every Glasgow train, just in caseâ'
I turned to him, my eyes filled with amazement.
ââSundays were the worst. I'd get out to the Sma Glen or the Carse, walk as long as the light lasted, come back and write to you.'
The look on my face. As if a stranger were importuning me on the street. âI received no letters.'
âI didn't send themâ'
He'd planned it last night, how he would put it to me incrementally, nudging me home. But having started, he had to get it all off his chest.
ââI've enough put by to keep us comfortably in a house of our own. Bruntsfield, Morningside. Gullane, if you fancy the sea.'
âHugh,' I said, with a gentleness he didn't like the sound of.
But if he stopped now it would never be said, so he ploughed on. He could arrange his affairs any way that pleased me. It was his habit to winter in Ayrshire, on his brother's farm, but he'd thole the east coast wind for me if I preferred Edinburgh. I wouldn't be short of invitations. The Royal Society of this or that, the Red Cross ball, dinners at the Surgeons' Hall. He tried to make me see it: the stir I would create.
By Jove, where's he been hiding you?
I didn't smile or look at him, yet the air between us felt kinder. I sat very still, eyelids lowered, lips slightly parted. My lovely profile. Half in shadow like this, I could have been the girl he proposed to in 1916.